Get It Now! - Keyword Connects

Transcription

Get It Now! - Keyword Connects
Leads, Leads,
and More Leads
For years now, I’ve listened to a host of consultants, speakers and experts talk to home improvement companies about their online strategies,
and all of the different steps that they must take
to be successful.
But what I rarely hear these same experts talk
about is how these efforts actually generate what
your business needs to grow the most: leads.
In fact, most “experts” don’t talk intelligently about
how their online strategies lead to the sequence
that drives your business:
Most are carefully vague about how their approaches will lead to this sequence, generalizing
their online programs as “lead generation – without real numbers and results to back them up.”
We know better. Not all leads are created equally.
Different lead sources have different values, based
on how well they convert, eventually into sales.
When it comes to online metrics, there are so
many things that can be tracked and so many
“experts” telling you which ones to look at, that
it can be overwhelming.
The worst offenders? Companies that offer lead
generation services.
These guys love to trumpet the numbers they
can generate for you. But, like a magician’s
misdirection, they point you towards indicators
that make them look good but that fail to drive
the leads, appointments and sales that you
really need.
So that’s what this brief e-book is all about.
Over the next few pages, we’ll take a look at five
pairs of common online metrics. In each case, I’ll
explain why one matters and why the other is
likely to be misleading at best, and a colossal
waste of your time and money at worst.
Remember, before spending your hard-earned
dollars to “boost the numbers,” make sure you’re
boosting the numbers that actually make
a difference.
All Metrics Are
Not Created Equal
We all look at metrics.
And that makes sense – it’s the only way to objectively measure results and, from there, make
improvements to your sales process.
Todd Bairstow
Co-Founder
Keyword Connects
But it’s not that simple.
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#1
LEAD GEN INSIGHT
Visitors vs. Visitors From
Within Your Marketing Territory
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The key is to focus on visitors to your Web site from
within your territory. Those are visitors who could be
real prospects, and ultimately drive revenue for you.
And that’s the metric you should focus as an indicator
of success.
Google Analytics (we highly recommend you use this
free application) offers a mapping tool that shows you
where your Web traffic comes from. You can drill all
the way down to individual cities and towns, allowing
you to ignore overall visitors and instead pay strict
attention to the territories that matter to you.
Let me ask you a question. Do all of your customers live in a specific geographic area?
I’m willing to bet that the answer is “Yes.” After all,
home improvement, by its very nature, involves
showing up, in person, at the homes of would-be
customers.
Lead Gen
Insight #1:
Maybe your business operates in a 50-mile radius of
your office. Maybe you cover three states. Or, serve
two counties.
Web site traffic only
matters if it’s coming
from within your
marketing territory.
The broader point is that you can’t sell home improvement products to people on the other side of the
country. Or outside of your territory.
Doesn’t it follow then, that the most important traffic
to your Web site – “visitors” – only matters when it’s
coming from inside your marketing territory?
Absolutely. Which is why you shouldn’t look at the
overall number of visitors to your Web site as an
indicator of success. If you operate in a territory 100
miles around St. Louis, why would visitors from Seattle
matter to you? It’s doubtful they will ever turn into
sales for your business.
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#2
LEAD GEN INSIGHT
Leads vs. Issued Leads
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Here’s an example.
According to lead sellers, a “bathroom remodeling
lead” could be a $30,000 gut renovation project. Or a
$1,200 vanity replacement. Or a $700 cracked tile job.
Or a $400 tub reglazing.
There are huge differences among these opportunities – even though lead sellers typically refer to them
all as “bathroom remodeling” leads.
But this is the game that so many lead gen companies
play. Deliberately setting the bar low to goose their
numbers. And their profits.
What’s “a lead” anyway?
The truth is, it could be almost any name, address,
phone number or combination thereof. And for many
lead generation companies, that pathetically broad
definition is exactly what they use when promising to
“deliver leads.”
Of course, if that’s all it took, you could just grab a
copy of the local phone book and be off and running
– it, too, is filled with names, addresses and phone
numbers.
Here too, if it’s not significant enough to become
an issued lead that’s passed to a salesperson, it’s not
what you’re looking for. Don’t let their numbers
fool you.
Lead Gen
Insight #2:
But that’s not what you need, and that’s not what you
should be tracking – particularly when it comes to
online lead sellers.
Instead, you want to measure “issued leads,” defined
as leads given to a salesperson to follow up after
someone has spoken on the phone to an interested
homeowner. Those are the leads that result in sales.
The definition of
“a lead” is incredibly
subjective. Issued
leads is the metric
to measure.
So it’s much more than just a numbers game – lead
quality matters a lot. And there are important differences between what one provider considers a lead,
and what another considers a good sales opportunity.
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#3
LEAD GEN INSIGHT
Clicks vs. Conversions
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Which clicks matter? Those that lead
to conversions.
Here again, Google Analytics will help you pull back
the covers. You can see where the clicks come from
and you can distinguish click-bot traffic from real,
local people who spend time on your Web site, and
are interested in buying what you’re selling.
Clicks have been around as an online metric since the
dawn of the Web. They’re easy to track and we intuitively understand what they mean.
But just as visitors from outside your marketing
territory are worthless, clicks for their own sake don’t
matter either.
Clicks from India, for example, are not only not in your
marketing territory, they probably aren’t even real
(e.g. “click-bots”). Traffic that stays on your Web site
for a second (literally), also isn’t coming from a real
person, let alone a home improvement prospect.
How? By looking at the time they spend on your Web
site. Serious visitors will spend a minute or more on
your Web site. They will also visit at least 2-3 pages
while there, as they learn more about you and what
you sell.
Not phantom visitors who land on your Web site and
then immediately disappear.
Lead Gen
Insight #3:
Yet, they register as clicks.
But wait, it gets worse.
“Top line” click
numbers can be
misleading. Track the
ones with the
potential to convert.
Not only are these random clicks meaningless, unscrupulous online marketing companies will do
things to deliberately increase their volume. Just to
make their campaigns appear to perform better.
What you want visiting your Web site are flesh-andblood human beings. And so you need to move from
“clicks in general” to “clicks that matter.”
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#4
LEAD GEN INSIGHT
Phone calls vs.
Qualified phone calls
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So, in their programs, they may also list you under
“roof repair,”“roof snow removal” and “gutter installation.”They are incented to drive calls to you…but not
necessarily for the type of work you want.
Then they trumpet their results back to you. “Look at
all the calls our program is generating for you!”
Pay-Per-Call services are growing in popularity. They
generate home improvement leads in the form of
phone calls to you. You pay based on the number of
phone calls you get.
And unlike all the irrelevant, misleading and downright unethical means used to generate online traffic,
inbound phone calls don’t lie.
Most of the time.
Remember, when you sign up a service to generate
phone calls, it is in their best interest to generate as
many calls as possible. Some of these calls will be
great, others will be garbage.
Other shady tactics include putting your name and
number out to cold call lists, auto-dialers, as well as
having technology call you at night, after business
hours. The more calls that come in, high quality or not,
the more money they make – and the more money
you waste.
The solution here is to monitor your telephone traffic.
You must track the number of calls you receive and
the number of these that result in issued leads.
Lead Gen
Insight #4:
One way that these lead gen companies increase
call volume is by deliberately misrepresenting you in
online directories.
Inbound phone calls
are generally good
quality leads. But make
sure you’re not paying
for bogus activity you
don’t need.
Here’s an example. Many roofers don’t want repair
work. They want full roof replacements that are worth
their time and effort.
But for pay-per-call companies, it’s not necessarily in
their best interest to make that distinction.
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#5
LEAD GEN INSIGHT
Social Followers vs. Reviews
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Why? Because reviews are a new type of “online currency.”The more you have (good or bad, actually), the
more likely Google, Yahoo and others will rank your
Web site near the top of your category.
Second, reviews are important because many of your
prospects will read them. Homeowners perceive high
risk in hiring a home improvement company. They
don’t want to be taken by an unscrupulous provider,
or hire a slipshod company to work on their home.
“Followers,”“Likes,” and “Fans” on Facebook, Twitter,
Pinterest and elsewhere, are all the rage these days.
Not only are these social metrics hip, they’re easy to
measure. And so when social activity increases, it’s
reasonable to assume you are making progress.
Online reviews are an important means by which
homeowners decide whether or not to pick up the
phone and call you.
The key is to get your team to try to drive online
reviews. Most businesses do not have any online
reviews…So getting even a handful from happy customers can make a big difference.
The problem is that we have not found – nobody has
found – a significant correlation between this type of
activity and leads for a home improvement business.
It’s just not there.
Unlike a coffee shop, where somebody may visit 80
or 90 times a year, the home improvement customer relationship is immediate and temporary. Even if
somebody “likes” your page, that doesn’t translate
into that individual spending thousands of dollars for
replacement windows.
Vendors and consultants like to say that, “you need
to be big in social media.” Ignore them. In the overall
home improvement marketing scheme, social media
has a supporting role for your brand. But it doesn’t
drive any volume of leads.
Now, you may ask “Won’t bad reviews hurt me?”
The answer is that a couple of bad reviews won’t hurt
you. Even the best companies in the world get bad
reviews. Homeowners understand that intuitively. As
long as you have good reviews to counter and balance the bad ones, you’re doing fine.
But a dozen bad reviews in a row will hurt you. I have
no advice for this situation except to try and do a better job in your customers’ eyes going forward.
Social reviews by customers, on the other hand,
are extremely valuable.
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The important thing is to make sure that as part of
your standard, post-install process – when you call
to check in and ask for referrals – that you also ask
customers to go onto Yelp, Google, Angie’s List (or
whatever they prefer) and review their experience.
Believe it or not, online reviews are much more valuable to your business for a number of reasons than all
of the “Likes” in the world.
Lead Gen
Insight #5:
Social followers are fun
and exciting. But not
valuable. Instead,
focus on getting
positive reviews for
your company online.
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Summary
Lead Gen Insight #1:
Lead Gen Insight #4:
Web site traffic only
matters if it’s coming
from within your
marketing territory.
Inbound phone calls are
generally good quality
leads. But make sure
you’re not paying for
bogus activity you
don’t need.
Lead Gen Insight #2:
Lead Gen Insight #5:
The definition of “a lead”
is incredibly subjective.
Issued leads is the metric
to measure.
Social followers are fun
and exciting. But not
valuable. Instead, focus
on getting positive
reviews for your
company online.
Lead Gen Insight #3:
“Top line” click numbers
can be misleading. Track
the ones with the
potential to convert.
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In
Conclusion
Tie Your Online Metrics
to Your Sales.
Activity – even precisely measured activity – can be
easily confused with results. Nowhere is this
more common than when gauging success online.
Fortunately, as a home improvement company,
the simple sequence you need to follow doesn’t
change:
Your key metrics, and despite whatever the lead
gen hucksters out there may tell you, will always
be those most closely tied to activities that drive
real sales into your company.
All the best in online success!
keywordconnects.com
Call Us: (781) 899-3675
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